<span>The correct answer to the first question is romantic. The speaker of the poem explains how beautiful the face of his beloved is. She is so beautiful that her face could never appear hateful.
The correct answer to the second question is praising. The speaker is praising the subject of the poem, not denouncing her.
The correct answer to the third question is simile. The speaker uses the simile of Eve's apple to make a comparision between the apple and the face of his beloved. It is a simile, not a metaphor, because he says, "How like Eve's apple..."
The correct answer to the fourth question is deception. The simile of Eve's apple symbolizes the deception in beautiful things.
The correct answer to the fifth question is virtue / corruption. The speaker contrasts his beloved's beauty and her virtue to show that her beauty does not reveal her inner corruption.</span>
The only one that seems logical would be: B; The other gods remain cautious as they watch.
It creates suspense as to what event they are watching over.
Answer:
Do you have a picture of the paragraph?
I believe the answer is:
<em>After a brief period of suspense, the will of my mistress was read, and we learned that she had bequeathed me to her sister's daughter, a child of five years old. </em>
The words 'bequathed' means the act of passing ownership from one person to another. Even though the mistress is depicted as a kind owner, the fact that she can freely pass the ownership of a human being without her consent shows that the slaves simply seen as an object or property.
I answered mine with this and got it correct:
Keyword: Complicate
Picture: making things harder than they have to be